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1. Recurrent Respiratory Papillomatosis Frederick S. Rosen, MD
Anna M. Pou, MD
June 25, 2003
2. Introduction Exophytic lesions of aerodigestive tract; tend to recur and spread
Juvenile Onset (JORRP) vs. Adult Onset (AORRP)
3. Epidemiology Bimodal age distribution: 2-4 years and 20-40 years
Children: Most common benign lesion of larynx, second most common cause of hoarseness
4.3/100,000 children
Younger age at diagnosis implies more severe disease
4. Epidemiology
5. Epidemiology 1.8/100,000 adults
Adult men more than women (3:2)
Less aggressive than JORRP
Most require <5 procedures over lifetime (vs. 19.7 procedures for children)
6. Etiology and Transmission HPV types 6 and 11
Nearly 100% of RRP
80-90% of condyloma acuminata
HPV type 16 rare cause of RRP; associated with increased risk of malignant transformation
HPV: Nonenveloped icosahedral (20-sided) capsid virus, double-stranded DNA
7. Etiology and Transmission HPV targets epithelial cells; may be active or latent
Type 11 worse prognosis than type 6
Transmission of JORRP: link to maternal condyloma established
Direct contact with condyloma in birth canal
Transplacental spread (1 of 109 children delivered via C-section still develop RRP)
Post-natal exposure
8. Etiology and Transmission Triad of primiparous mother, teenage mother, vaginal delivery known risk factor for JORRP
Transmission of AORRP: not well established, but different from JORRP
Large number of sex partners and frequent oral sex known risk factors
Possible activation of latent infection
Possible anogenital-to-oral contact
9. Etiology and Transmission HPV transmission by casual contact NOT a concern
10. Histology Finger-like projections of nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium with vascularized core
Parakeratosis (retention of nuclei in stratum corneum), koilocytosis (cytoplasmic vacuolization), and acanthosis (epidermal hyperplasia)
Variable atypia
11. Histology
12. Histology
13. Histology Commonly at junction between respiratory and squamous epithelium
Common occurrence at tracheotomy site (iatrogenic squamo-ciliary junction)
Common sites
Limen vestibuli
Nasopharyngeal surface of soft palate
Midline laryngeal epiglottis
Upper and lower margins of ventricle
Undersurface of TVC’s
Carina and Bronchial spurs
14. Clinical Features
15. Clinical Features Extralaryngeal spread in 30% of children, 16% of adults
Triad: Progressive hoarseness, stridor, respiratory distress
Other presentations: chronic cough, choking, recurrent pneumonia, FTT, dyspnea, dysphagia, ALTE
Adults may present w/ globus sensation
Frequent misdiagnoses: asthma, croup, allergy, laryngitis, bronchitis
16. Clinical Features Possible outcomes: spontaneous regression, no regression, recurrence after years of remission, malignant transformation
NO tendency for regression during puberty
Most common: recurrent exophytic lesions requiring frequent debulking
Death usually from frequent surgical procedures or respiratory failure from distal progression
Bronchopulmonary involvement in 4-11% of children
17. Malignant Transformation Rare; 20 pediatric cases reported in world literature
Universally fatal
Most common in adults with RFs
Tobacco
Previous XRT
History of Bleomycin
Infection with HPV type 16
Usually larynx in adults, bronchopulmonary in children
E6 and E7 oncogenic (inactivate p53, pRb)
18. Patient Assessment Stridor present since birth less likely
Hoarseness most common presentation
Must first determine respiratory distress
OR
Establish safe airway
Auscultate over nose, open mouth, neck, chest
Stridor should not change with position
Flexible laryngoscopy: If not possible, go to OR
19. Staging
20. Surgical Treatment Standard of care
Eradicate disease, assure adequate airway, and improve voice without morbidity
Most common options: CO2 laser, cold instrumentation, microdebrider
KTP laser may also be useful with ventilating bronchoscope for tracheobronchial lesions
21. Surgical Treatment Complications of CO2 laser:
Scarring
Webbing
Alteration of mucosal wave
Stenosis
Airway Perforation
Airway fire
22. Surgical Treatment Cold instrumentation: useful in adults; stripping usually not indicated; more bleeding, but fewer complications
Use of microdebrider major development in last few years
3.5 or 4 mm skimmer blade (angled)
Safer and more accurate than laser
Can remove tracheal lesions when used with rigid endoscope
23. Surgical Treatment
24. Surgical Treatment Retrospective study (El-Bitar): All complications occurred with laser, none with microdebrider; more procedures required with microdebrider
Prospective study (Pasquale): No difference in voice or pain; lower operative time and cost with microdebrider
25. Surgical Treatment Laser-safe tube, Jet ventilation, Apneic technique
Jet ventilation: increased risk of distal airway spread, pneumothorax, mucosal drying, gastric distention
Up to 14% of JORRP require tracheotomy
Prolonged trach associated with distal tracheal spread
Decannulate as soon as adequate disease control
26. Adjuvant Treatment Up to 10% of RRP patients require adjuvant medical treatment
Criteria: >4 surgical procedures per year, distal multisite spread, rapid regrowth of disease with airway compromise
(Average for children=4.4 procedures/year)
27. Adjuvant Treatment Alpha-interferon: used for RRP since 1980s
Side effects common and multiple
Acute reactions (fever, myalgia, anorexia, etc.) controlled by nighttime administration X 2 weeks
Chronic reactions: neutropenia, spastic diplegia, thrombocytopenia, renal insufficiency
Given IV, IM, or SC for 6 months
Complete response in 30-50%, partial in 20-42%; 50% recurrence rate
28. Adjuvant Treatment Photodynamic therapy: Dihematoporphyrin followed by argon pump dye laser; results in increased light sensitivity X2-8 weeks; may be improved by Foscan
Indole-3-Carbinol: dietary supplement from cruciferous vegetables; few side effects; acts on estrogen metabolism: 1/3 complete response, 1/3 partial response, 1/3 no response
29. Adjuvant Treatment Retinoic acid: may have synergistic effect with alpha-interferon; should not use in females of child-bearing age
Ribavirin: used to treat RSV pneumonia; initial IV loading dose followed by PO
Acyclovir: thought to act on coinfecting organism
30. Adjuvant Treatment Cidofovir: most significant new development
Broad spectrum activity against Herpes viruses
Inhibits viral DNA polymerase
Intracellular half-life=65 hours
No adverse effects with intralesional use
Dose=2.5-6.25 mg/ml
Complete remission common in adults, rare in children
31. Adjuvant Treatment Cidofovir: safety and efficacy
Optimal dose, interval, treatment duration, drug combinations yet to be determined
Possible tumorigenicity: Adenocarcinoma noted with subcutaneous injection in rats; none noted in humans to date
Long-term remission unknown
First reported for adult larynx in 1998 (Snoeck)
32. Adjuvant Treatment
33. Adjuvant Treatment Home intercom monitor adequate
Optimize treatment of GERD and asthma
The future: HPV vaccine, possibly using E6, E7 antigens
34. Adjuvant Treatment
35. Conclusion HPV types 6 and 11
Lesions common at squamo-ciliary junction
RRP does not regress with puberty
Malignant transformation: rare but universally fatal
Prophylactic C-section is NOT routinely recommended, but should be strongly considered in young, primiparous mothers with recent HPV infection and genital warts
36. Conclusion Treatment: palliative surgery while awaiting natural disease remission
Latest developments: the microdebrider and intralesional cidofovir
Microdebrider safer, cheaper, and faster than laser
Cidofovir highly effective, but no long-term data regarding tumorigenicity or remission
Hope for the future: HPV vaccine